Tom Sherman on Sat, 20 Nov 1999 23:41:46 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> INTERACTIVITY AND VECTORS (nt) |
INTERACTIVITY AND VECTORS (nt) The key to new media is interactivity and the basis of interactivity is cause and effect. Being able to make a difference, even the tiniest difference, is what people want. They will accept, even relish, being a tiny or very small speck of difference in a world of gigantic, all pervasive sameness. When we step back from direct person-to-person experience, our effect on the world is reduced in scale. It is like we get excited about being insects again--being able to inflict mosquito bites--but we would be so much more impressive if we could deliver west nile fever or something really deadly like malaria. I want to be a vector so when I make my little dent (bite), it has big, magnificent consequences. We like interactive media experiences. We like to be able to make a little dent in our reality. Interacting with the world helps us form and reform our identity. Some are satisfied constructing their identity with cheap kits, like a handful of choices we can click on in a menu, or the inane questions of a public opinion survey. Remember Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head. Cheap kits don't help us to refine our identities. We need to be recognized, documented, insulted, assaulted and attacked to sense our presence in the world. There is nothing worse than facing indifference head-on, and realizing you are being ignored--that you are invisible, totally inconsequential. If any difference that makes a difference is information, then indifference is the opposite of information. In the information age the struggle is between difference and indifference. Hence the deadly little bites of terrorism. All little bites that make a difference are problematic in the state of indifference, whether they maim or kill or gum up the works or simply manifest in unorthodox behaviour. Tom Sherman ----- (nt) Nerve Theory will present an updated version of "Shades of Catatonia" at Stuttgarter Filmwinter, Wand 5 e.V. im Filmhaus, Stuttgart, Germany, January 13-16, 2000. Nerve Theory is the collaborative identity of Bernhard Loibner and Tom Sherman. For more information on Nerve Theory, visit the All.Quiet website: http://www.allquiet.org/ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net